Does mysterious painting prove blue denim was around 200 years before Levi’s?

The origin of the world’s most enduringly popular fabric is in ­dispute, as a new exhibition spotlights a claim that firmly links denim with 17th-­century Italy and takes its history back 200 years.

Blue denim, that all-American ­symbol of informality and a life lived on the open range, is already also contentiously attributed to ­southern France, while modern jeans ­mythology still has it that Levi Strauss, a German immigrant, first came up with the idea of making workwear out of this sturdy cotton in San Francisco 150 years ago.

Now a gallery run by international fine art dealer Maurizio Canesso is appealing for further research to help identify an anonymous painter who specialised in street scenes that often depict poor people in northern Italy wearing what looks like blue denim.

 

Galerie Canesso, which has showrooms in major European cities and exhibits at London art fairs, is ­celebrating 30 years of trade in May with a touring exhibition of the major works it has sold, lent back by their owners.

A centrepiece will be Woman Begging With Two Children, one of ten paintings by the unknown “Master of the Blue Jeans” that Canesso believes establish the roots of the ­fabric in his native Lombardy.

 

The painting’s central figure wears what seems to be a frayed denim skirt.

 

“Unfortunately, we have no new theories about who the Master of the Blue Jeans was,” said Véronique Damian of Galerie Canesso in Paris, adding that clues still point to the ­artist having spent most of his career in Lombardy in the late 17th century, although there are reasons to think he trained elsewhere.

 

Six months ago the nearby coastal city of Genoa, which claims to be the home of “jeans” (as in the denim label Blue de Gênes, “Genês” being the department of the first French Empire containing the city), marked its claim with a big exhibition called Genova Jeans. “We are ready to host in Genoa an event that will lead to the rediscovery of one of the world’s most famous fabrics and garments whose origins are inextricably linked to our city,” said the city’s mayor, Marco Bucci.

This month a venue in Milan, Mudec, is promoting Levi’s own version of the story with a free exhibition, which includes a pair of jeans worn by a miner in the early 1870s.